helping with some spelling corrections in powerlevel9k.zsh-theme instructional sections

pull/22/head
Rouzbeh Sarrafieh 8 years ago
parent fd9c998f02
commit 72cfc35d3e

@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ else
POWERLEVEL9K_INSTALLATION_PATH="$0" POWERLEVEL9K_INSTALLATION_PATH="$0"
fi fi
# Resolve the instllation path # Resolve the installation path
if [[ -L "$POWERLEVEL9K_INSTALLATION_PATH" ]]; then if [[ -L "$POWERLEVEL9K_INSTALLATION_PATH" ]]; then
# If this theme is sourced as a symlink, we need to locate the real URL # If this theme is sourced as a symlink, we need to locate the real URL
filename="$(realpath -P $POWERLEVEL9K_INSTALLATION_PATH 2>/dev/null || readlink -f $POWERLEVEL9K_INSTALLATION_PATH 2>/dev/null || perl -MCwd=abs_path -le 'print abs_path readlink(shift);' $POWERLEVEL9K_INSTALLATION_PATH 2>/dev/null)" filename="$(realpath -P $POWERLEVEL9K_INSTALLATION_PATH 2>/dev/null || readlink -f $POWERLEVEL9K_INSTALLATION_PATH 2>/dev/null || perl -MCwd=abs_path -le 'print abs_path readlink(shift);' $POWERLEVEL9K_INSTALLATION_PATH 2>/dev/null)"
@ -103,10 +103,10 @@ fi
# #
# Methodology behind user-defined variables overwriting colors: # Methodology behind user-defined variables overwriting colors:
# The first parameter to the segment constructors is the calling function's # The first parameter to the segment constructors is the calling function's
# name. From this function name, we strip the "prompt_"-prefix and # name. From this function name, we strip the "prompt_"-prefix and
# uppercase it. This is then prefixed with "POWERLEVEL9K_" and suffixed # uppercase it. This is then prefixed with "POWERLEVEL9K_" and suffixed
# with either "_BACKGROUND" or "_FOREGROUND", thus giving us the variable # with either "_BACKGROUND" or "_FOREGROUND", thus giving us the variable
# name. So each new segment is user-overwritable by a variable following # name. So each new segment is user-overwritten by a variable following
# this naming convention. # this naming convention.
################################################################ ################################################################
@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ CURRENT_BG='NONE'
# Begin a left prompt segment # Begin a left prompt segment
# Takes four arguments: # Takes four arguments:
# * $1: Name of the function that was orginally invoked (mandatory). # * $1: Name of the function that was originally invoked (mandatory).
# Necessary, to make the dynamic color-overwrite mechanism work. # Necessary, to make the dynamic color-overwrite mechanism work.
# * $2: The array index of the current segment # * $2: The array index of the current segment
# * $3: Background color # * $3: Background color
@ -207,7 +207,7 @@ CURRENT_RIGHT_BG='NONE'
# Begin a right prompt segment # Begin a right prompt segment
# Takes four arguments: # Takes four arguments:
# * $1: Name of the function that was orginally invoked (mandatory). # * $1: Name of the function that was originally invoked (mandatory).
# Necessary, to make the dynamic color-overwrite mechanism work. # Necessary, to make the dynamic color-overwrite mechanism work.
# * $2: The array index of the current segment # * $2: The array index of the current segment
# * $3: Background color # * $3: Background color
@ -1016,7 +1016,7 @@ powerlevel9k_prepare_prompts() {
$(print_icon 'MULTILINE_SECOND_PROMPT_PREFIX')" $(print_icon 'MULTILINE_SECOND_PROMPT_PREFIX')"
if [[ "$POWERLEVEL9K_RPROMPT_ON_NEWLINE" != true ]]; then if [[ "$POWERLEVEL9K_RPROMPT_ON_NEWLINE" != true ]]; then
# The right prompt should be on the same line as the first line of the left # The right prompt should be on the same line as the first line of the left
# prompt. To do so, there is just a quite ugly workaround: Before zsh draws # prompt. To do so, there is just a quite ugly workaround: Before zsh draws
# the RPROMPT, we advise it, to go one line up. At the end of RPROMPT, we # the RPROMPT, we advise it, to go one line up. At the end of RPROMPT, we
# advise it to go one line down. See: # advise it to go one line down. See:
# http://superuser.com/questions/357107/zsh-right-justify-in-ps1 # http://superuser.com/questions/357107/zsh-right-justify-in-ps1

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